ACHAEA

(Redirected from Achaia)

'Achaea' (Greek: , ''Achaïa''; see also List of traditional Greek place names) is an ancient province and a present prefecture of Greece, on the northern coast of the Peloponnese, stretching from the mountain ranges of Erymanthus and Cyllene on the south to a narrow strip of fertile land on the north, bordering the Gulf of Corinth, into which the mountain Panachaicus (1,902 m, the northernmost mountain range in the Peloponnese) projects. Achaea is bounded on the west by the territory of Elis, on the east by that of Sicyon, which, however, was sometimes included in it. The population in 2001 had reached over 300,000.

Contents
Geography
Climate
History
Population
Sights and sports
Economy
Transport
Communications and media
Ceased and defunct newspapers
Radio
Television
Companies
Provinces
Municipalities and communities
Former municipalities
See also
Persons
Sporting teams
Teams with multiple sporting clubs
Basketball only
Defunct and historic teams
External links
Notes
References

Geography


Its geography features the Omblos to the east Erymanthos mountains to the centre, the mountains including Marathia to the east, Chelmos or Aroania in the southeast, the Skollis in the southwest, Movri to the west and Mavros Oros to the west. Rivers ordered from west to east includes the Larissos, Tytheos, Parapeiros and the Charadros to the northwest and the Selinountas and the Vouraikos and several others to the east. Most of the forests are in the mountain ranges, several are in the plains including the extreme west and grasslands around the mid-elevation areas and barren lands in the uppermost areas.

Climate


Its climate has hot summers and mild winters. Sunny days dominate during the summer months in areas within the beaches and partially cloudy and rainy in the mountains. Snow is very common during the winter in the mountains of Erymanthus, Panachaicus and Aroania. Winter high temperatures are around the 10°C mark throughout the low lying areas.

History


Map of ancient Achaea

The origin of the name has given rise to much speculation; Achaean is a common term for the Greek troops in Homer. Possibly corresponding are the ''Ahhiawa'' of 13th century BC Hittite texts. The Achaeans proper in the Catalogue of Ships are from Argos and Tiryns. However, one theory is that the Achaeans were driven to this region by the Dorian invaders of the Peloponnese. Another Achaea, in the south of Thessaly, called sometimes ''Achaea Phthiotis'', has been suggested to be the cradle of the original tribe.
In Ancient Roman times the name of the province of Achaea was given to the whole of Greece, except Thessaly, most of Epirus, and Acarnania. It is in this latter enlarged meaning that the name is always used in the New Testament (e.g., Acts 18:12, 27; 19:21; Romans 15: 26; 16:5). It was conquered and incorporated into the Roman Empire in the year 146 BC. Emperor Augustus established Achaea as a senatorial province; generally speaking, the region benefited from the enlightened attitude of Roman emperors such as Augustus. This was because Achaea was in closer proximity to Rome than other provinces, so it was given political advantages and greater status in order for the Roman court to maintain a political equilibrium within the empire.[1] The rule of Achaea in Roman times was placed under the Senate while a preconsul of Praetorian rank was appointed as its governor with the administrative seat in Corinth. However, there was no strong vice of Roman control over Achaea, since no Roman garrisons were posted there, native religious and social groups were widely tolerated by the Romans, and a general sense of free determination amongst the Greeks was commonplace.
After the reign of Augustus the province of Achaea was combined with Macedonia from the years 15 until 44, coinciding with the frontier troubles. This combined imperial province was overseen by a governor placed at Moesia along the Danube River. In the year 67, Emperor Nero declared Greece to be politically free from the Roman Empire, and the Greeks began their own autonomous rule. However, Roman authority over Greece was reestablished soon after with Emperor Vespasian, who placed the province once again in the hands of the Roman Senate. Roman control over Achaea was firm until the reign of Diocletian in the late 3rd century, yet it remained a Roman province until the ultimate fall of Rome in the 5th century.
In the 13th century the Principality of Achaea was founded in Greece after the Fourth Crusade.
The Principality of Achaea fell to the Ottoman Empire in the mid-15th century. The area was later invaded by the Venetians in the late-16th and the 17th centuries and later invaded by the Ottomans again. In 1821, it became part of Greece. During the Greek War of Independence, Aigio was the first city to be liberated by the Greek and several villages days after as well as the city of Patras. Achaea or Achaia later produced several heroes including Kanaris, Zaimis and Roufos and prime ministers of Greece including Andreas Michalakopoulos as well as some head of states. In the first years of the country, the prefecture amalgamated to form the prefecture of Achaea-Elis of Achaea and Elis until 1899 and covered an area of around 6,000 km², the older enlarged again in 1909 and did not finally split again until 1936. The area of Mataragka remained historically Ilia until the 1990s along with the area of Vouprasi. Georgios Mavrommatis (ran in 1828) was the first prefectural head in modern Achaea and Georgios Glarakis was the first leader that ran in the 1830s.
Achaea saw an influx of refugees that arrived from Asia Minor during the Greco Turkish War of 1919-1922. Tens of thousands were relocated to their camps in the suburbs of Patras and a few villages mainly within the coastline. One of the camps was names Prosfygika
After World War II and the Greek Civil War, much of its buildings were rebuilt and took several years.
In the 20th century, the Area which excluded Metochi reverted from Ilia as the municipality of Kalotychia became Vouprasias. That part had been a part of Ilia, then Elis during the ancient times. Another reorganization reverted Mataranga and Spata into the prefecture of Achaia and the municipality of Larissos.
A mid-1994 late-night (around 3 AM local time) earthquake rumbled the area with a magnitude around 5 on the Richter scale. This was a minor one. It was after another earthquake. A forest fire consumed the northern part of the Panachaicus in the mid-1990s. Many municipalities were recreated between 1994, several more and 1997 and several others in 1998 which revived Tritaia, Movri, Erymanthos, Kalavryta and many more. Every administrative community became municipal and communal districts.
Mudslides numbering around 1,500 occurred between 1950 and 2005 according the university study, much of the mudslides occurred to the north and the central parts. Mudslides are one of the most in all of Greece.
Announced in the mid-2000s, a reservoir will dam up the tributaries of Tytheos and the Parapeiros rivers which will created a lake of the size of about 20 km² and will be located between east of Loussika and Tritaia southwest of Farres. It will supply water and produce electricity to most of the prefecture. In rankings, it will become the prefecture's largest lake and the third artificial lake.
Recently, Achaea or Achaia was struck by several forest fires (July 2007), one included Dervenakia in July 18, Patras on July 19 and several days later (July 24), the heatwave that had spread throughout the southern and the southeastern parts of the continent brought fire to the prefecture which spread to several villages south of Aigio including Mavriki, Paraskevi, Kounina, Pteri, Mamoussia and several more within the Selinountas valley and another in the northeastern slopes of the Panachaiko. Flames were towering as high as 50 m in altitudes as high as 1,200 m, seen as far as 70 to 80 km away. Smoke reached as high as 400 to 600 m above ground level. Smoke covered several villages. A day later, with the fire spreading out of control, flames became more dangerous and spread into Kato Pteri, Ano Diakopto, Zachloritika, Kato Zachloritika, up to the Gulf of Corinth along with Selinountos and Valimitika and consumed an area of over 200 km². The fire destroyed hundreds of houses and buildings, farmlands including olive groves and grapevines and cut off roads. Livestock including cattle where not spared. The event severely dented the areas agricultural economy. Almost 70 to 80% of the areas farmlands in the valleys and plains were destroyed but not some of its windmills. The flames ended in most of the villages including Kounina on July 28. The fire ended in most of Aigialeia on July 29. Arson is suspected to be the cause of the fire.

Population


Karst Field near Kato Loutsi north of Kastria in Achaia, Greece

Achaea today has about one-third of its peninsula's inhabitants and two-thirds of Achaia living in the Patra area which is the capital of Achaea and the Peloponnese, and more than half of the population live in the city (municipality). It is also the third largest city in Greece excluding Piraeus. The main industrial area is 20 km south of the city near Phares, and Tsoukoulaiíka and Vrachnaiíka.
Aigion is a seaside city with a city hall and a city square is in its heart. The population is around 30,000.

Sights and sports


There are two skiing resorts, one on the Panachaicus west of the mountain top (elevation around 1700 m) east of Patras—it will be Nafpaktos's closest because of the new bridge (mid-2004)—and the other on Aroania, sometimes still called Chelmos, near Kalavrita. It is Kalavrita's closest resort.
Kalavrita is a town situated more than 70 km to the east via the road from Achaea's capital. A few kilometres to its west is a monastery situated on the peak of the hill. Its name is Aghía Lávra. 12 to 20 km east, is Cave Lakes where lakes are inside this brilliant cave. It is open to tourists, and the length is around 300 to 500 m. A skiing resort is on Mount Chelmos. The mountain hosts the most modern Greek telescope, named 'Aristarchus' (after the ancient Greek astronomer - Aristarchus of Samos) and operated by the 'National Observatory of Athens' A narrow gauge railway track runs for 30 km and acts as a tourist attraction (mainly). The track begins near Kalavrita and ends off Diakopton.

Economy


Achaia has the most supermarkets in the Peloponnese and the western part of Greece.
Temeni is a place where the famous spring water Avra (Άυρα) or Aúra is manufactured. It is owned by Tria Epsilon, a division of Coca-Cola Company and a parent.
There are no oil refineries except for a small refinery near Rio.

Transport


There are two main bus terminals in the cities of Patras and Aigio.
The main highways are:

E55, NW, N-Cen., N

E65, N, NE

GR-5, N-Cen., N

GR-8 (longest), old national road, N, NE

GR-8A, superhighway/new national road, N, NE

GR-9, old and new, N-Cen., NW, W

GR-31 (Aigio - Pteri), NE, E-Cen.

GR-33, N-Cen., SW, S, SE

GR-48, N-Cen., N

GR-62 (Kato Achaia - Araxos), NW (length: 13 km)

★ Aigeira-Akrata Road

Kalavryta-Diakopto Road

Kalavryta-Kato Kleitoria Road

Patras By-Pass

Patras-Kalavryta Road
Pavement began in the 1960s, the 1970s and the 1980s
A bypass which bypasses Patras begun construction in 1990, and extended construction to GR-33 in 1992, Savalia in 1993, East Patra or Patras in 1995, and in 1998 into GR-8. Lights were installed in the early 2000s on the beltway, and opened to traffic on late 2003. It starts from near Roitika and ends just south of Rhion.
GR-8 was the first superhighway, along with GR-5 in the prefecture. The beltway is the second, and the bridge will be the third. Its length now has almost 100 km of superhighway. Its length was only 70 to 75 km until 2003.
The Rio-Antirio bridge, which started construction in 2000 (though plans had been made throughout the 1990s, and was supposed to begin in those years), opened in mid-2004, connecting the mainland and the Peloponnese. This eliminated much of the ferry service which has been used for about half a century for automobiles. Since then, there is only the rare ferry service in the city of Aigio(n), which is the ferry route to Aghios Nikolaos in Phocis.
A future superhighway between Patras and Pyrgos was announced in the winter of 2003 and will be in plan, but no date has been set.''

Communications and media


===Newspapers, fanzines and others

Current newspapers



★ ''Achagiotika Nea'' - Kato Achaia

★ ''Allagi'' - Patras

★ ''Elliniki Dimokratia'' - Patras

★ ''Epi ta proso'' - Patras

★ ''Evdomada'' - Patras

★ ''Filodimos'' - Aigio

★ ''Frouros tis Anatolikis Aigialeias'' - Akrata and eastern Aigaleia

★ ''Ta Gegonota tis Achaias'' - Achaea

★ ''I Gnomi'' - Patras

★ ''Imera'' - Patras [1]

★ ''Imerisios Kyrix'' - Patras

★ ''Kosmos tis Patras'' - Patras

★ ''Paraliaki'' - Patras

★ ''Patraiki Evdomada'' - Patras

★ ''Politis ton Patron'' - Patras - political

★ ''Proodos'' - Patras

★ ''Proti tis Aigaleias'' - Aigio and Aigaleia

★ ''Simerini'' - Patras

★ ''Splats'' - a fanzine based in Patras

★ ''Sport Week'' - Patras - sports

★ ''Sportivo west'' - Patras - sports

★ ''Styx'' - Akrata

★ ''Symvoulos Epocheiriseon'' - Patras
Ceased and defunct newspapers


Achaikos Kyrix - an older newspaper of Patras

Tachydromos tis Anatolis - Patras, one of the few newspapers that were only published in French
Radio


ERA Patras - located in Rio next to the Rio Junction with the new GR-9/E55 and the GR-5/E55 and the GR-48/E65

Step FM - 97 FM

Super B - Patras

Top FM - 93 FM

Radio Aigio - 99.2 FM
Television


Achaia Channel - Patras

Patra TV - Patras

Super B - Patras

Tele Con - extinct

Tele Time - regional

AXION - Aigio

Companies



Achaiki

Kronos Supermarkets - Patras

Provinces



Aigialeia - Aigio

Kalavryta Province - Kalavryta

Patras Province - Patras

Municipalities and communities


Municipality YPES code Seat (if different) First existence Refounded
Aigeira0701Aigeira - -
Aigio0702Aigio - -
Akrata0703Akrata - 1997
Aroania 0704 Psofida - -
Diakopto0706Diakopto - 1997
Dymi 0707 Kato Achaïa - 1997
Erineos 0708 Kamares - 1994
Farres 0722 Chalandritsa - 1997
Kalavryta0709 Kalavryta - 1997
Larissos 0711 Lappa - 1997
Lefkasio 0713 Kleitoria - 1997
Messatida 0714 Ovrya - 1997
Movri 0715Sageika - 1997
Olenia 0723 Lousika - 1997
Paion 0716 Dafni - 1997
Paralia0717 Paralia - -
Patras0718 Patras 1830 not refounded
Rio0719 Rio - -
Sympoliteia0720Rododafni - -
Tritaia0721Stavrodromi 1830s-1910s 1997
Vrachnaiika0705Vrachnaiika - -
Community YPES code Seat (if different)
Kalentzi0710Kalentzi - -
Leontio0712Leontio - -

Former municipalities


Erymanthia - existed until 1913, it covered the western and the central portions of the Erymanthos mountain range except in the Elis side.

Panachaia - existed until the late-1940s, it covered the western portion of the Panachaiko mountains hence its name which is the current eastern portion of the city of Patras.
See also


List of settlements in the Achaea prefecture

Persons



Anastasios Charalambis General and Prime Minister for one day in 1922.

Vasileios Christopoulos, an artist

Vasileios Chatzis, an artist

Kostas Davourlis Footballer of Panachaiki

Theodoros Deligiannis a Prime Minister of Greece

Ioannis Diakidis

Stavros Dilios

Dimitrios Gounaris a Prime Minister of Greece

Athanasios Kanakaris-Roufos

Ioannis Karamdanis

Andreas Kassis

Kostas Katsouranis Footballer - European Champion (Euro 2004)

Taso Kavadia

Konstantinos Konstantopoulos a Mayor of Patras and Prime Minister of Greece

Christos Korillos

Andreas Lontos, a Mayor of Patras

Vassilis Makris, an artist

Memos Makris, an artist

Dimitrios Maximos a Prime Minister of Greece

Andreas Michalakopoulos a Prime Minister of Greece

Andreas Mikroutsikos

Betty Moschona, an actor

Thanos Mikroutsikos, an artist

Eleni Oikonomopoulou, an artist

Kostis Palamas national Greek poet

Dionysis Papayannopoulos, an actor

George Papandreou (senior) a Prime Minister of Greece

Georgios Papadopoulos Leader of the military junta

Panos Paparigopoulos, an artist

Timos Perlegkas

Roufos Family:


Angelos Roufos


Benizelos Rouphos a Prime Minister of Greece


Ioannis Roufos


Vasilis Roufos

Dimitris Sotiriadis

Konstantinos Stefanopoulos President of Greece

Panagiotis Skagiopoulos

Epameinondas Thomopoulos, an artist

Georgios Tofalis

Dimitrios Tofalos Olympic Champion

Gerasimos Volos, an artist

Alexandros Zaimis a Prime Minister and President of Greece

Sporting teams


Division rankings were as of the 2005-06 season for most teams:
Teams with multiple sporting clubs


Achaiki - Kato Achaia, third division

Achaikos Kato Achaias

Achaios Saravali Patras - Saravali - fourth division

Achilleas Ovrias FC - Ovrya, fourth division

Achilleas Patras AC - Patras, fourth division

Achilleas Kamaron

AEK Patras FC - Patras, fourth division

Aetos Patras - Patras, fourth division

Agiou Dimitriou FC

Anagennisi/Aias Sympoliteias - Rododafni

Apollon Eglykada

Apollon Patras

Apolloniada Patras

Aris Patras

Aris Valimitika

Aris Logos

A.O. Ampelokipi Patras

A.O. Anagenisi Patras

Agyia FC - Patras (Agyia), fourth division

Albatross Glyfadas Patras - Patras, fourth division

AS Apollo Eglikadas, fourth division

Aris - fourth division

Asteras Temenis

Astrapi Psarofai - Patras (Psarofai), fourth division

Atlantida Girokomeiou - Patras - third division (as of 2007)

Atromitos Lappa

Atromitos Patras - Patras, fourth division

Atromitos Zarouchleika Patras - Patras (Zarouchleika) - fourth division

Dafni FC

Dafni Kalavrita

Diagoras Vrachneika - Vrachneika

Diakopto AC - Diakopto - fourth division

Doxa Chalandritsas FC - Chalandritsa, fourth division

★ Doxa Elaionas - Elaionas

Doxa Paralias - Paralia, fourth division

Dimi A.O.

Doxa Niforeika

Egieas Egion

Elpida Egklykadas - Egklykada, fourth division

Esperos Patras

Ethnikos Patras - Patras, fourth division

Ethnikos Sageika - Sageika, fourth division

Filia Patras - Patras, fourth division

★ Floga Rodia - Rodia

Fostiras Ovrias FC - Ovrya, fourth division

Galini Patras

★ Galaxidi - Demenika

Ikaros Petrotou

Ikaros Lakopetras

Iraklis Patras - Patras, fourth division

Iraklis Leykas

★ Iraklis Zachloritika - Zachloritika

A.O. Kallithea

A.O. Kaminia

A.O. Kalavrita

A.O. Krini

A.O. Krini 97

P.A.O. Kritikon Patras

Kypros Patron AC - Patras, fourth division

Posidvn Elikis

A.E. Limnochori - Limnochori

Megas Dikefalon

Milon Ovrias

NE Patras - Patras, fourth division

★ Niki Nikoleika - Nikoleika or Nikolaiika

NO Patras - Patras, fourth division

APS Olympiakos - fourth division

Olympiakos Aigio - Aigio, fourth division

Olympiakos Kamares - Kamares - fourth division

Olympiakos Patras - Patras - fourth division

Olympiacos Soudeneika

Olympiada

A.O. Omonia Patras

Ormi Patras - Patras - fourth division

Pampatraikos - Patras - third division (as of 2007)

Panachaiki - Patras, second division

Panachaikos Souli

Panaigialeios - fourth division

Panathinaikos Skagiopouleiou - fourth division

Panionios Achilleas Agyias AU - Patras (Agyia), fourth division

P.A.O. Kosmos

Pelopas Patras

Perivola A.O.

APS Patrai - Patras, fourth division

Patraikos AC - Patras, fourth division

PAS Patraikos - Patras, fourth division

EA Patras - Patras, fourth division

Patreos - Patras, fourth division

Perivoila F.C.

Pigasos Begkoulariou FC, fourth division

Pirsos Patras

A.O. Polyteknos

Poseidonos Patras AU - Patras, ceased

Proodevtiki - fourth division

A.O. Psilalonia Patras

A.O. Romanos - Romanos

Skakistikos Omilos Patras - Patras, fourth division

Spartakos Ovrya - Ovrya - third division (as of 2007)

T.A.D. '93 Aigiou

A.O. Thea - Thea

Thyella Aigio - Aigio

Thyella - Patras, third division

Thyella Skiada - third division

Tritaiikos Stavrodromi - Stavrodromi

A.O. Vasilikou

A.O. Vounteni

A.O. Vouprasio

A.O. Vouraikos Diakopto

A.P.S. Zavlani - fourth division

A.O. Ziria
Basketball only


A.O. Skagiopouleio
Defunct and historic teams


Foinikas Patras - Patras

Lefkos Asteras - Patras

Olympiakos Kato Achaia - Kato Achaia

Thriamvos Patras - Patras, now part of EPA Patras

External links



★ http://www.geocities.com/world_greek_geografia/Greece/Axaia/Axaia.htm

Notes


1. Bunson, 1.

References





★ Bunson, Matthew (1994). ''Encyclopedia of the Roman Empire''. New York: Facts on File Inc.

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